Competitive GOP Primary in Wisconsin Spurs 91% Turnout Surge from 2008
The Romney-Santorum battle rivals the Stassen-MacArthur-Dewey contest in 1948 for the most competitive cycle in the primary’s 100-year history; voter turnout soars more than 90 percent from 2008
Believe it or not, Wisconsin lived up to the hype.
It may not have been apparent from the broadcast media coverage – where the first calls of Mitt Romney’s victory in Wisconsin came well inside of an hour – but the Badger State GOP presidential primary ended up not simply being the most competitive in the 100-year history of the contest, but also home to the second biggest surge in Republican turnout across the nation this cycle compared to four years ago.
Much like the previous primaries in the Midwestern battleground states of Michigan and Ohio, Mitt Romney edged Rick Santorum once again, this time by 7.2 points, 44.1 percent to 36.9 percent.
The 2012 primary was the state’s 26th such Republican contest dating back to its origins in 1912 and is one of only four in history to be decided by less than 10 points as well as one of four in which the winner carried the state with a plurality of the vote:
· In 1948, former Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen defeated Douglas MacArthur by a 5.4-point margin in the Badger State, 39.4 percent to 34.0 percent. Eventual GOP nominee Thomas Dewey was third with 25.2 percent.
· Four years later, in 1952, Ohio U.S. Senator Robert Taft was victorious over California Governor Earl Warren by 6.8 points by a 40.6 percent to 33.8 percent margin. Stassen came in third in a five-candidate field with 21.8 percent.
· In 1980, Ronald Reagan defeated George H.W. Bush by 9.8 points with 40.2 percent of the vote to 30.4 percent for his soon to be vice-presidential running mate. Illinois congressman John Anderson came in third with 27.4 percent.
However, unlike the 1948, 1952, and 1980 primaries – which were three-way races with all three candidates receiving at least 20 percent of the vote – the 2012 contest was a two-way battle between Romney and Santorum, making the margin particularly competitive.
Ron Paul finished a distant third with 11.2 percent while Newt Gingrich ended up in fourth place at 5.9 percent.
With plenty of ads and campaign stops from the major players, the highly anticipated Wisconsin primary boosted turnout significantly in the state compared to four years ago.
(The Badger State held its primary at approximately the same time on the primary calendar relative to other states in 2008 when it was the 36th contest, compared to #30 in 2012).
Wisconsin Republican primary voter turnout surged more than 91 percent in 2012 from 410,607 voters in 2008 to over 785,000 on Tuesday.
That marks the second largest cycle-to-cycle increase in Republican primary or caucus voting across the 31 states that have held contests so far this cycle.
While Mississippi technically recorded a bigger increase in turnout from 2008 at +99.4 percent, the Magnolia State was the 42nd state to vote that cycle, and did so only after all major challengers to John McCain had suspended their campaigns. The state was the 25th to vote this year.
Other states recording significant turnout increases in 2012 primaries and caucuses are Kansas at +52.8 percent, Vermont at +52.7 percent (though voting much earlier than in 2008), and South Carolina at +35.5 percent.
(There are no comparable cycle-to-cycle numbers available for Hawaii and Wyoming (which did not release raw caucus vote totals in 2008), Idaho (which switched from a primary to a caucus), and Washington (which hosted both a caucus and primary in 2008)).
In terms of the raw number of votes, the 2012 GOP primary was the second largest on record in Wisconsin behind only 1980 when the three-way battle between Reagan, Bush, and Anderson brought 907,853 individuals out to vote that April.
Tuesday’s huge turnout in Wisconsin is contrasted by Maryland, which saw a decrease from 2008 of more than 82,000 voters (-25.8 percent).
Wisconsin Republican Presidential Primary Winners and Margin of Victory, 1912-2012
Year
|
Winner
|
%
|
2nd
|
%
|
MoV
|
2012
|
Mitt Romney
|
44.1
|
Rick Santorum
|
36.9
|
7.2
|
2008
|
John McCain
|
54.7
|
Mike Huckabee
|
36.9
|
17.8
|
2004
|
George W. Bush
|
99.1
|
(Unopposed)
|
0.0
|
99.1
|
2000
|
George W. Bush
|
69.2
|
John McCain
|
18.1
|
51.1
|
1996
|
Bob Dole
|
52.3
|
Pat Buchanan
|
33.8
|
18.5
|
1992
|
George H.W. Bush
|
75.6
|
Pat Buchanan
|
16.3
|
59.3
|
1988
|
George H.W. Bush
|
82.2
|
Bob Dole
|
7.9
|
74.3
|
1984
|
Ronald Reagan
|
95.2
|
(Unopposed)
|
0.0
|
95.2
|
1980
|
Ronald Reagan
|
40.2
|
George H.W. Bush
|
30.4
|
9.8
|
1976
|
Gerald Ford
|
55.2
|
Ronald Reagan
|
44.3
|
10.9
|
1972
|
Richard Nixon
|
96.9
|
Pete McCloskey
|
1.3
|
95.6
|
1968
|
Richard Nixon
|
79.7
|
Ronald Reagan
|
10.4
|
69.3
|
1964
|
John Byrnes
|
100.0
|
(Unopposed)
|
0.0
|
100.0
|
1960
|
Richard Nixon
|
100.0
|
(Unopposed)
|
0.0
|
100.0
|
1956
|
Dwight Eisenhower
|
95.9
|
John Chapple
|
4.1
|
91.8
|
1952
|
Robert Taft
|
40.6
|
Earl Warren
|
33.8
|
6.8
|
1948
|
Harold Stassen
|
39.4
|
Douglas MacArthur
|
34.0
|
5.4
|
1944
|
Douglas MacArthur
|
74.3
|
Thomas Dewey
|
15.3
|
59.0
|
1940
|
Thomas Dewey
|
72.6
|
Arthur Vanderberg
|
27.1
|
45.5
|
1936
|
William Borah
|
98.2
|
Alf Landon
|
1.8
|
96.4
|
1932
|
George Norris
|
94.2
|
Herbert Hoover
|
4.4
|
89.8
|
1928
|
George Norris
|
87.1
|
Herbert Hoover
|
9.5
|
77.6
|
1924
|
Robert La Follette
|
62.5
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
35.8
|
26.7
|
1920
|
Robert La Follette
|
52.8
|
Leonard Wood
|
15.0
|
37.8
|
1916
|
Robert La Follette
|
98.8
|
(Unopposed)
|
0.0
|
98.8
|
1912
|
Robert La Follette
|
73.2
|
William H. Taft
|
26.1
|
47.1
|
|
Average
|
74.3
|
|
17.1
|
57.2
|
Data from Wisconsin Government Accountability Board and Wisconsin Blue Book. Table compiled by Smart Politics.
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Forgive me, but the high turnout may have been partially due to all of the local elections and school bond referendums on the ballot. This was our regular Spring Election in addition to the Presidential Primary.